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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

3D Vectorial Holography Achieved Through Longitudinally Engineered Metasurfaces

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
March 7, 2026
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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The manipulation of three-dimensional (3D) vectorial optical fields stands at the forefront of cutting-edge photonics research, poised to revolutionize fields ranging from volumetric display technologies to secure encryption and optical computing. Traditional holographic methods, while effective in controlling either intensity or polarization in two dimensions, have struggled to bring together precise modulation of both intensity and vectorial polarization in true volumetric settings. This limitation has long restricted the development of fully vectorial three-dimensional holograms, which require simultaneous control over light’s amplitude, phase, and polarization as a function of spatial depth.

In a groundbreaking study published in Light: Science & Applications, a collaborative team of researchers from Nanjing University has introduced an ultrathin metasurface platform that successfully achieves three-dimensional vectorial holography by engineering the longitudinal propagation of high-density arrays of structured light beams. This innovative metasurface technology orchestrates not only the axial intensity but also the evolving polarization states of hundreds of beams, enabling genuine volumetric sculpting of light fields. This approach resolves a significant technical barrier in complex light field reconstruction, paving the way for a new generation of programmable photonic devices.

The cornerstone of this breakthrough lies in the decomposition of a 3D target light field into a densely packed set of quasi non-diffracting beams, each with customized longitudinal response functions meticulously designed to define their axial intensity envelopes and polarization trajectories along the propagation direction. By mathematically synthesizing these responses from superpositions of multiple Bessel beam components with uniform spacing in wavevector (k_z) space, the team achieved exquisite control over optical wavefront shaping. Through modulation of complex weighting coefficients assigned to each Bessel component, the metasurface can generate tailored axial intensity distributions—from smooth gradients to sharp steps—while enacting sophisticated polarization dynamics including linear polarization rotation, ellipticity variation, and helicity inversion.

Structurally, the metasurface is composed of a dual-matrix configuration of rectangular silicon nanopillars fabricated atop a fused silica substrate. These anisotropic, subwavelength scatterers serve as finely tunable nanoscale waveplates, enabling precise control over amplitude, phase, and polarization of transmitted light at each pixel. The meticulous design strategy employs a dual-matrix holographic encoding framework to convert the complex vectorial field profiles into physical geometries and orientation parameters for the nanopillars. This results in a compact, highly integrable optical device with a footprint of approximately one millimeter square, which elegantly implements high-dimensional vectorial holography with ultrathin form factor.

Experimental validation demonstrates that the metasurface reconstruction reveals high-contrast images at discrete axial planes with remarkable fidelity across a broad visible spectrum. Comprehensive full Stokes polarimetry measurements affirm that the intended polarization trajectories—the complex evolution of polarization states along the depth axis—are faithfully realized. The device’s ability to engineer polarization states traversing the entire Poincaré sphere’s poles confirms its unparalleled capacity to generate intricate three-dimensional vectorial light patterns previously unattainable with conventional optical elements.

Beyond mere visualization, the platform introduces a compelling demonstration in optical information security. By encoding individual symbols within unique combinations of propagation depth and polarization states, the metasurface enables a hardware-level optical encryption schema. Such encoding ensures encoded information remains concealed within a clutter of decoy beams unless interrogated with precisely matched polarization analyzers and axial positions. Without the decryption key comprising the correct angular and positional parameters, the encoded pattern appears as random noise—an unbreakable cryptographic shield crafted in the optical domain itself, impervious to digital or physical reverse engineering.

The authors highlight that this metasurface design approach is inherently scalable and adaptable. Increasing the number of Bessel beam components included in the superposition or decreasing the physical pixel size of the metasurface can enable finer axial resolution and richer volumetric scenes. Advances in large-scale metasurface fabrication techniques promise mass producibility of these devices for real-world applications. The convergence of high-dimensional vectorial control and compact integration heralds transformative impacts on next-generation volumetric displays, quantum photonic circuits, high-density optical data storage, and encrypted optical communication networks.

Moreover, the researchers foresee that tailoring longitudinal polarization and intensity landscapes within optical fields could unlock new degrees of freedom for light–matter interactions. Enhanced control over three-dimensional vectorial light could advance nonlinear optics, optical manipulation, and quantum state engineering at an unprecedented level. The carefully engineered propagation dynamics intrinsic to this platform indicate a paradigm shift where spatial depth adds a versatile control axis beyond conventional planar optics.

By bridging the gap between theoretical vectorial beam synthesis and practical metasurface realization, this work establishes a foundational technology that enriches the optical toolkit with full volumetric polarization manipulation capabilities. The integration of complex longitudinal polarization evolutions combined with programmability brought forth by nanopillar tiling signals a new era in holography, optical encryption, and photonic device engineering. As these metasurfaces become more widely accessible, the boundaries of customized light field design will dramatically expand, reshaping how we harness light for communication, imaging, and secure information processing.

In conclusion, the creation of 3D vectorial holography through longitudinally engineered metasurfaces represents a key milestone in photonics, marrying nanoscale fabrication precision with sophisticated beam synthesis theory. This unique synthesis facilitates truly volumetric control over both amplitude and polarization components of light, unlocking complex three-dimensional optical functionalities previously thought impractical. The broad wavelength bandwidth, high contrast, and intricate polarization patterns achieved experimentally underscore the tremendous technological potential for diverse applications from next-generation volumetric display systems to intrinsically secure optical infrastructures.

Subject of Research: Longitudinally engineered metasurfaces for three-dimensional vectorial holography

Article Title: Longitudinally engineered metasurfaces for 3D vectorial holography

Web References: 10.1038/s41377-025-02158-5

Image Credits: Ting Xu et al.

Keywords

3D vectorial holography, metasurface, nanopillars, Bessel beams, longitudinal beam arrays, polarization control, volumetric displays, optical encryption, photonic communication, high-contrast holograms, Stokes polarimetry, nonlinear optics

Tags: 3D optical field manipulation3D vectorial holographyaxial intensity modulationcomplex light field reconstructionhigh-density structured light beamslongitudinally engineered metasurfacespolarization and amplitude holographyprogrammable photonic devicesspatial depth light modulationultrathin metasurface platformsvectorial polarization controlvolumetric display technologies

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